There are elections coming up all over the world from Australia to Europe, America to Africa, there are local, State, National and even International elections in 2010.
In America there will be 34 senators elected. How many governors will be re-elected in the United States gubernatorial elections of 2010 in November. What will Arnold Schwarzenegger do next in his political career? Will Arnold Schwarzenegger terminate politics and go back to Hollywood. Will we see Sarah Palin the governor of Alaska re elected again or will Sarah Palin save Republican money and time for the tilt at the presidential elections in 2012. There are so many interesting questions and facts in the upcoming elections in the United States of America.
In other countries around the world, African elections are going to see political activity like this continent has not seen before. It looks like Africa ‘the forgotten continent’ is about to remind the world that African politics are alive and well.
The most interesting African upcoming election is in South Africa on 22 April 2009. The South African election will see both the National Assembly and Provincial Legislatures elected and then the President will be elected by the National Assembly.
So Watch the Space for all the media and results of this election.
There will be presidential elections in 2010 held in Burkina Faso, Burundi, Comoros, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Madagascar, Rwanda, Sudan and United Republic of Tanzania. General elections or council elections will also be held in Burundi, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mauritania, Mauritius, Namibia, São Tomé and Príncipe, Somaliland, Sudan, United Republic of Tanzania, Tunisia and Uganda. This is just the official list and we should not be too surprised to see election fever in Zimbabwe again soon. Madonna may be hoping elections in Malawi will see a change in adoption laws. So, don’t underestimate how elections in other contries will affect you. The world is becoming smaller by the day and if there is one thing that the Global Financil Crises has taught us is that countries, nations and institutions around the globe all connect us little people together. So when someone joins the unemployment line in China, or General Motors suddenly becomes poorer than Oprah Winfrey be sure that unless you live under a rock, somehow, some way it is coming to a supermarket or showroom near you.
This weekend we have 40 political parties contesting the Indonesian elections; yes, 40 political parties in over 400 administrative areas.
Who will get to sit on the United Nations Security Council and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
What direction will the G20 go and who will be included and who will be left out?
The Global Financial Crises (or the GFC) is hitting the globalised economy very hard and raising lots of questions about financial regulation. Will socialism replace free market capitalism and how will the Banksters repair their broken and busted financial institutions. Will socialism save capitalisms as*s and if so how many truck loads of money will be needed to bail the worlds nations out of the hole it seems to have dug for us all. World leaders are running scared as this hole seems long dark and no one seems to know if it really does go all the way to China or not.
So for the most up to date political media and financial media, from the political statistics to the down and dirty political gossip, get on board Politics 2010.
The future waits for no one!
Thursday, April 9, 2009
politics, elections, America, Africa, Global Financial Crises
Labels:
Africa,
America,
elections,
Global Financial Crises,
politics
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